Fresh analysis has revealed who’s tipped to triumph at the Eurovision Song Contest final – and Britain’s Look Mum No Computer isn’t among the favourites.

A comprehensive study examining every Eurovision winner since 1956 has identified the typical champion’s profile: a female artist (55.6%), performing solo (73.2%), delivering a pop number (44.4%), sung in English (50%), with lyrics centred on love, romance and relationships (60.3%).

MyBettingSites.co.uk’s research also suggests the ideal age range is 25 to 27, with the average winner aged 26 and the median at 25.

Britain’s representative Sam Battle faces an uphill battle – his track ‘Eins, Zwei, Drei’ features German lyrics rather than English.

Looking ahead to 2026, the supercomputer has identified three contenders matching five key winning characteristics, making them the strongest prospects for victory. So who are they?, reports the Express.

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Sam Battle aka Look Mum No Computer(Image: Getty)

Australia’s Delta Goodrem ticks multiple boxes as a female solo artist performing pop songs in English about love, romance and relationships.

Bulgaria’s DARA matches the profile of a 27-year-old female solo performer delivering a pop track in English.

Germany’s Sarah Engels completes the trio – a female solo artist singing an English-language pop song exploring themes of love, romance and relationships.

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Delta Goodrem could end up winning based on data from previous winners(Image: Getty)

Despite these data-driven predictions, Finland currently leads the bookmakers’ odds at 11/10 for the 2026 competition. Greece sits in second position at 4/1, while Denmark occupies third spot at 11/2.

According to BOYLE Sports, the UK faces long odds of 100/1 to claim victory at the 2026 contest. The bookmakers have priced them at 11/2 to secure a top 10 finish and 40/1 to land within the top five.

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Linda Lampenius x Pete Parkkonen are representing Finland(Image: Getty)

Lawrence Lyons, spokesperson for BOYLE Sports, commented: “Eurovision wouldn’t be Eurovision without the UK arriving with big dreams, bold staging and a loyal fanbase hoping this might finally be their year.”

He added: “But the latest odds suggest the UK faces a real uphill battle, which will take some of the shine off Sam Battle’s chances. At 11/2 to make the top 10, there’s still a route to a respectable finish if the performance lands, but 100/1 to win tells its own story – it would take a major Eurovision shock for the UK to trouble the top of the leader board now.”

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Tonight’s Eurovision Song Contest grand final will broadcast on BBC One and BBC iPlayer from 8pm BST.

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